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VOL.<p>V-E ELECTRIC CLUB SCENE OF JUNIOR LEAGUE DANCE TOMORROW NIGHT The Junior League, Uptown Freshman Women's organization. will hold its first dance tomorrow evening at the Electric Club. The Club is located on the 39th floor of the Civic Opera Building, 20 N. Wacker Drive. The music will be furnished by Del Rene and his orchestra, with Chuck Grayson doing the vocals for swoon-bait. Ticket sales guarantee a large turnout. Eds and co-eds who have not as yet purchased tickets are urged to do so immediately. Tickets, priced at $1.80 per person, are available uptown at the Student Activities Office, as well as from committee membe rs. Members of the committee are: Mary McNally, Marcia Brice, Mercedes Coates, Lorraine Fitzgerald, Eileen Brucker, Pat Smith, Marie Gillarde, Dot Novak, Fran Guzzardo, Elaine Sochowski, Helen Porten, Verne Pollard, Ginny Wunderlich, Rosemary Funsten, Marie Ulrich, and Dolores Gog'gins. On the Downtown campus, the Petite Paulites, an energetic Alumni Sponsor Concert by DePaul Symphony and Choir Proceeds to Form DPU Alumni Fund In furthering the cultural objectives of the De Paul Alumni Association, a joint concert of} the De Paul University Sym-! phony Orchestra and the Uni-| versity Choir will be presented! in Orchestra Hall on May 22, at 8:30 p. m. The 75-piece orchestra will be under the direction of Mr. Richard Czerwonky, professor in the De Paul Music School and the choir will be directed by Dean Arthur C. Becker, also of the Music School. Featured soloist of the evening will be Miss Rose Goldberg, concert pianist, member of the Music School faculty and alumna of Auction Books for H. A. BERGDAHL ADDRESSES JOB High Bidders Wait In Uptown Library Miss Crook, uptown librarian, announced that the book auction which ended last Friday, May 4, was a definite success. However there are several books which have not as yet been called for by the high bidders. These students are asked to call for them as soon as possible.Announcement was also made of several new books added to the library, among them: The Ministry of Fear, Graham Breene The Building of Jalna, DeLa Roche Road to Serfdom, Hayek Daniel's Islands of the Pacific Searchlight on Peace Plans, Wynner An Intelligent American Guide to the Peace, Welles Between Heaven and Earth, Werfel Gill's Fact and Fiction In Modern Science Maritain's The Dream of Descartes and McCormick's Problems of the Postwar World. Those aforementioned students, high bidders at the auction, who have not as yet called for their books are asked to please report to the library at their earliest convenience. group headed by Francine Sullivan, Jeanette McNamara, Erica Husslein, and Jean Skaller, are holding the tickets. The dance is a stag affair, semi-formal, and is open to all University students and their friends. For the gals who wish to come stag, a bevy of servicemen have been invited. Answers to invitations have been received from Tower Hall, Abbott Hall, Illinois Tech, Glenview Naval Air Station, Wright Junior College, Navy Pier. Chanute Field, and Great Lakes, indicating that males will be plentiful. he dance promises to be one of the top occasions of the year. The Electric Club presents a perfect setting for such a dance. It is spacious and has a beautiful view of the city. The officers of the Junior League organization are: president: Marie Gillarde vice-president: Pat Smith treasurer: Mary McNally secretary: Eileeri Brucker. Father Thomas W. Connolly, C.M., is the faculty adviser of the association. the De Paul School of Music. The funds accruing from this concert will start a De Paul University Alumni Fund to be maintained under the jurisdiction of the alumni board of directors with Judge Cornelius J. Harrington as its president. Tickets for the occasion are not reserved they have been distributed to various alumni and tickets may be purchased from them or by writing or telephoning the alumni office, 2235 Sheffield Ave., Diversey 1991. Included in the program will be Dvorak's Symphony from the "New World" Olaf Trygvassen for Chorus and Orchestra by Grieg Tschaikowsky's Piano Concerto in flat minor: and Sibelius' Finlandia. FINDING FORUM A new plan for its meetings was put into effect last Wednesday evening by the Job Finding Forum according to the plans formulated at a meeting held April 25 in the Law Library. Mr. H. A. Bergdahl, chairman of the speaker's group of the "Selling As A Cai'eer" Committee and of the Sales Executives' Club, spoke on "Post War Opportunities in Selling." Mr. Bergdahl's talk was only twenty minutes long as will be all future talks to be given by representatives of important professional clubs. These speakers will talk on post war opportunities. in their respective professions. Before the meeting started at 7:30, counselors were on hand for personal discussion with clients desirous of discussion. Following Mr. Bergdahl's talk was a question and answer period. The regular forum began at 8:00 p.m. and ended with a coffee forum on the first floor. Forum members gathered around a big table in true forum style and enjoyed the informal, frank, spirited discussion. THE DEPAULIA CATHOLIC STUDENT NEWSPAPER XXIII.—NO. 27 DE PAUL UNIVERSITY, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1945 DAY STIRS CAMPUS STUDENT REACTION IS VARIED AS OFFICIAL NEWS IS RELEASED VICTORY-EUROPE DAY, May 8, 1945.—Peace and its attendant joys and sorrows hit the De Paul campus today and laid stress on the V-J day yet to come. Students crowded around radios to keep abreast of the rapidly advancing events in the European theatre as also the progress of peace Mixed emotions marked the day for most De Paulites—some ... saw the veil lifted on a brightenlA/nnrl nPrtPn liPfin ing future some were struck by they get it over with?" per- This consciousness of the future together with a desire to "do something about it" is uppermost in the minds of John Q. Public. The general attitude is one of cleaning house and fumigating it of the diseases which have held it battle-ridden for so many years. Arm-chair strategists have become armchair reformists page upon page of notes have been read and written suddenly history, economics, political science take on new meaning for the students. Those who have to date only given a cursory glance to headlines have taken to detailed reading and reading between the lines. The Freedoms The four freedoms seem to be more than a set of paintings by Norman Rockwell—freedom from want, from fear, freedom of speech and freedom of worship De Paulites have been quoting them to one' another all day and realizing that they do mean something more than mere words. They realize, too. that words do not win a war and that real suffering is the cost of such freedom. "We're a bunch of kids doing a lot of necessary adult thinking"—was the apt summary of the situation by many today. Uppermost in their minds now is the avowal to gain by their education in order to avert in later years any recurrence of such a world-wide catastrophe. !!UUU vaded the classrooms. After two false alarms on the V-E day, notice, the students were fairly ^,ssoc,iallon, acclimated to the idea of end of hostilities in Europe and to many V-E day was an an- .. l-ICUiCU L/UUII Of Delta Theta Phi the memory of men who paid the price and who lie beneath foreign soil. The campus itself was quiet because of the absence of students, but on V-E ,. eve. when rumors were at their sponsored its annual faculty height, a feeling of why don't ?mn,f On Wednesday, May 2, the Delta Theta Phi Law Fraternity at which the law school fa™"/ h°"°r.' The dinner was held in the Main Dining Room of the Bar S. LaSalle a, the ,, 4 £or the IN THIS ISSUE... lf Street. Each of the faculty mem- be[f Save a sho? ta'k New nouncement of no great signifi-1 'ty were elected on Friday, May cance, especially to those whose officers for the fratern- *ear minds were chiefly concerned Pla™« former Dean Hay Kelley with the war in the Pacific. 's ,Bl1 Wood, an Evening Law School student. The balance of An Overall Picture the new officers and their reThe end of hostilities in spective positions are as Europe seemed not to effect the follows: Vice-dean Edwin De Paul population as much as Becker Clerk of the Rolls: did the news of difficulties with John C. Fox, Clerk of the Exthe Russian-Polish question and chequer: Vjarne Eng, Master of other aspects of the Peace Con- Ritual: Edward Stasukaitus, ference. As an overall picture Bailiff: Relbert Rider, and of the campus today, the stu- Tribune: John Mclntyre. dents seem more concerned with questions of ironing out peace plans and effecting the unconditional surrender of Japan. 1945"46„ ,?e" DCC May Dance Is Outstanding Social Event Last Friday evening, May 4, the Day Commerce Council held a May Dance in the 17th floor lounge. Refreshments, consisting of coca-cola and various kinds of cakes were served to the guests throughout the evening. Many members of the student body and faculty of the Day and Evening Commerce Schools attended and enjoyed dancing to the music provided for the occasion by the Rhythm Boys, a four-piece orchestra arranged for by the council for the evening's entertainment. Lillian Svatik was chairman of the decorations committee and was aided by Pat Davis, Jean McCurdy, Olga Novak, Jane Murphy, Sadie Voos, and Gerry Gerret. Unusual spring designs were made for the decoration of the lounge by Joe Fedo. John Gibbons was general chairman of the arrangements for the entire evening. NOTICE Students interested in receiving copy of bulletin entitled "Opportunities for Veterans at De Paul University" may secure a copy by calling at any one of the various De Paul libraries. Alumni Sponsor Concert ...Page 1, Col. 2 University May Day.- Page 1, Coi. 5 A Sedimenta! Journey ...Page 2, Coi. 1 De Bessenyey on San Francisco Parley Page 2, Col. 3 Editorial "The Little People" Page 3, Col. 2 Spillway Page 3, Col. 4 Double Dribble Page 4, Col. 1 Bowling News Page 4, Col. 5 Page 3, Col. 1 Pie Squared Fratority Holds Important Meet On Tuesday, May 8, the Pie Are Squared Fratority held its second social of this school year in the Men's Lounge of the Uptown liberal Arts Building. The officers of the fratority were very much gratified at the turn out, in spite of the fact that it was V-E Day. Refreshments, in the form of beer, potato chips, and soft drinks, were served. Next Tuesday, May 15, at 7:30 p.m., in Room 105 of the Science Building, the fratority will hold a very important meeting. It is imperative that all members be present at this meeting, because the rules and aims of the organization will be formally drawn up. Following this, the talk by Rosemary Allen, originally scheduled for May 18, will be given. On Tuesday, May 22, the fratority will hold its last social of the year. It will be a HardTimes party. Watch for further details in next weeks edition of the De Paulia. University May Day Will Honor Blessed Virgin On Friday, May 25, De Paul University will celebrate May Day in honor of the Blessed Virgin. The entire school will be invited to attend and provisions will be made to alter class hours in order to permit certain free periods which will enable all the students in the school to attend. The ceremonies will include the dedication of the school to the Blessed Virgin Mary and appropriate prayers will accompany the ritual. A special meeting of the University Sodality will be held Monday, May 14, in Room 201 at 11:50 a.m. All members are urged to attend. Those students who are interested in assisting at mass with the De Paul Sodality, are cordially invited to attend mass every Friday in the Priests' Chapel. SAC MEETS TO ELECT OFFICERS TUESDAY NIGHT The Student Activities Council will hold its next meeting Tuesday evening, May 15, at 8 p.m. The meeting will take place as usual in the 17th floor lounge in the Downtown Building.The assembly will be presided over by Lucia Plonka, president of the Student Activities Council.The main business of this meeting will be the election of officers for the coming year, 1945-46. Nominations will be opened from the floor. The offices which must be filled are: president, vice president, and secretary-treasurer. All representatives who constitute the voting quorum are requested by Rev. Thomas W. Connolly, C.M., moderator of the group, to please be on time because the meeting will begin punctually at 8 p.m.

V-E ELECTRIC CLUB SCENE OF JUNIOR LEAGUE DANCE TOMORROW NIGHT The Junior League, Uptown Freshman Women's organization. will hold its first dance tomorrow evening at the Electric Club. The Club is located on the 39th floor of the Civic Opera Building, 20 N. Wacker Drive. The music will be furnished by Del Rene and his orchestra, with Chuck Grayson doing the vocals for swoon-bait. Ticket sales guarantee a large turnout. Eds and co-eds who have not as yet purchased tickets are urged to do so immediately. Tickets, priced at $1.80 per person, are available uptown at the Student Activities Office, as well as from committee membe rs. Members of the committee are: Mary McNally, Marcia Brice, Mercedes Coates, Lorraine Fitzgerald, Eileen Brucker, Pat Smith, Marie Gillarde, Dot Novak, Fran Guzzardo, Elaine Sochowski, Helen Porten, Verne Pollard, Ginny Wunderlich, Rosemary Funsten, Marie Ulrich, and Dolores Gog'gins. On the Downtown campus, the Petite Paulites, an energetic Alumni Sponsor Concert by DePaul Symphony and Choir Proceeds to Form DPU Alumni Fund In furthering the cultural objectives of the De Paul Alumni Association, a joint concert of} the De Paul University Sym-! phony Orchestra and the Uni-| versity Choir will be presented! in Orchestra Hall on May 22, at 8:30 p. m. The 75-piece orchestra will be under the direction of Mr. Richard Czerwonky, professor in the De Paul Music School and the choir will be directed by Dean Arthur C. Becker, also of the Music School. Featured soloist of the evening will be Miss Rose Goldberg, concert pianist, member of the Music School faculty and alumna of Auction Books for H. A. BERGDAHL ADDRESSES JOB High Bidders Wait In Uptown Library Miss Crook, uptown librarian, announced that the book auction which ended last Friday, May 4, was a definite success. However there are several books which have not as yet been called for by the high bidders. These students are asked to call for them as soon as possible.Announcement was also made of several new books added to the library, among them: The Ministry of Fear, Graham Breene The Building of Jalna, DeLa Roche Road to Serfdom, Hayek Daniel's Islands of the Pacific Searchlight on Peace Plans, Wynner An Intelligent American Guide to the Peace, Welles Between Heaven and Earth, Werfel Gill's Fact and Fiction In Modern Science Maritain's The Dream of Descartes and McCormick's Problems of the Postwar World. Those aforementioned students, high bidders at the auction, who have not as yet called for their books are asked to please report to the library at their earliest convenience. group headed by Francine Sullivan, Jeanette McNamara, Erica Husslein, and Jean Skaller, are holding the tickets. The dance is a stag affair, semi-formal, and is open to all University students and their friends. For the gals who wish to come stag, a bevy of servicemen have been invited. Answers to invitations have been received from Tower Hall, Abbott Hall, Illinois Tech, Glenview Naval Air Station, Wright Junior College, Navy Pier. Chanute Field, and Great Lakes, indicating that males will be plentiful. he dance promises to be one of the top occasions of the year. The Electric Club presents a perfect setting for such a dance. It is spacious and has a beautiful view of the city. The officers of the Junior League organization are: president: Marie Gillarde vice-president: Pat Smith treasurer: Mary McNally secretary: Eileeri Brucker. Father Thomas W. Connolly, C.M., is the faculty adviser of the association. the De Paul School of Music. The funds accruing from this concert will start a De Paul University Alumni Fund to be maintained under the jurisdiction of the alumni board of directors with Judge Cornelius J. Harrington as its president. Tickets for the occasion are not reserved they have been distributed to various alumni and tickets may be purchased from them or by writing or telephoning the alumni office, 2235 Sheffield Ave., Diversey 1991. Included in the program will be Dvorak's Symphony from the "New World" Olaf Trygvassen for Chorus and Orchestra by Grieg Tschaikowsky's Piano Concerto in flat minor: and Sibelius' Finlandia. FINDING FORUM A new plan for its meetings was put into effect last Wednesday evening by the Job Finding Forum according to the plans formulated at a meeting held April 25 in the Law Library. Mr. H. A. Bergdahl, chairman of the speaker's group of the "Selling As A Cai'eer" Committee and of the Sales Executives' Club, spoke on "Post War Opportunities in Selling." Mr. Bergdahl's talk was only twenty minutes long as will be all future talks to be given by representatives of important professional clubs. These speakers will talk on post war opportunities. in their respective professions. Before the meeting started at 7:30, counselors were on hand for personal discussion with clients desirous of discussion. Following Mr. Bergdahl's talk was a question and answer period. The regular forum began at 8:00 p.m. and ended with a coffee forum on the first floor. Forum members gathered around a big table in true forum style and enjoyed the informal, frank, spirited discussion. THE DEPAULIA CATHOLIC STUDENT NEWSPAPER XXIII.—NO. 27 DE PAUL UNIVERSITY, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1945 DAY STIRS CAMPUS STUDENT REACTION IS VARIED AS OFFICIAL NEWS IS RELEASED VICTORY-EUROPE DAY, May 8, 1945.—Peace and its attendant joys and sorrows hit the De Paul campus today and laid stress on the V-J day yet to come. Students crowded around radios to keep abreast of the rapidly advancing events in the European theatre as also the progress of peace Mixed emotions marked the day for most De Paulites—some ... saw the veil lifted on a brightenlA/nnrl nPrtPn liPfin ing future some were struck by they get it over with?" per- This consciousness of the future together with a desire to "do something about it" is uppermost in the minds of John Q. Public. The general attitude is one of cleaning house and fumigating it of the diseases which have held it battle-ridden for so many years. Arm-chair strategists have become armchair reformists page upon page of notes have been read and written suddenly history, economics, political science take on new meaning for the students. Those who have to date only given a cursory glance to headlines have taken to detailed reading and reading between the lines. The Freedoms The four freedoms seem to be more than a set of paintings by Norman Rockwell—freedom from want, from fear, freedom of speech and freedom of worship De Paulites have been quoting them to one' another all day and realizing that they do mean something more than mere words. They realize, too. that words do not win a war and that real suffering is the cost of such freedom. "We're a bunch of kids doing a lot of necessary adult thinking"—was the apt summary of the situation by many today. Uppermost in their minds now is the avowal to gain by their education in order to avert in later years any recurrence of such a world-wide catastrophe. !!UUU vaded the classrooms. After two false alarms on the V-E day, notice, the students were fairly ^,ssoc,iallon, acclimated to the idea of end of hostilities in Europe and to many V-E day was an an- .. l-ICUiCU L/UUII Of Delta Theta Phi the memory of men who paid the price and who lie beneath foreign soil. The campus itself was quiet because of the absence of students, but on V-E ,. eve. when rumors were at their sponsored its annual faculty height, a feeling of why don't ?mn,f On Wednesday, May 2, the Delta Theta Phi Law Fraternity at which the law school fa™"/ h°"°r.' The dinner was held in the Main Dining Room of the Bar S. LaSalle a, the ,, 4 £or the IN THIS ISSUE... lf Street. Each of the faculty mem- be[f Save a sho? ta'k New nouncement of no great signifi-1 'ty were elected on Friday, May cance, especially to those whose officers for the fratern- *ear minds were chiefly concerned Pla™« former Dean Hay Kelley with the war in the Pacific. 's ,Bl1 Wood, an Evening Law School student. The balance of An Overall Picture the new officers and their reThe end of hostilities in spective positions are as Europe seemed not to effect the follows: Vice-dean Edwin De Paul population as much as Becker Clerk of the Rolls: did the news of difficulties with John C. Fox, Clerk of the Exthe Russian-Polish question and chequer: Vjarne Eng, Master of other aspects of the Peace Con- Ritual: Edward Stasukaitus, ference. As an overall picture Bailiff: Relbert Rider, and of the campus today, the stu- Tribune: John Mclntyre. dents seem more concerned with questions of ironing out peace plans and effecting the unconditional surrender of Japan. 1945"46„ ,?e" DCC May Dance Is Outstanding Social Event Last Friday evening, May 4, the Day Commerce Council held a May Dance in the 17th floor lounge. Refreshments, consisting of coca-cola and various kinds of cakes were served to the guests throughout the evening. Many members of the student body and faculty of the Day and Evening Commerce Schools attended and enjoyed dancing to the music provided for the occasion by the Rhythm Boys, a four-piece orchestra arranged for by the council for the evening's entertainment. Lillian Svatik was chairman of the decorations committee and was aided by Pat Davis, Jean McCurdy, Olga Novak, Jane Murphy, Sadie Voos, and Gerry Gerret. Unusual spring designs were made for the decoration of the lounge by Joe Fedo. John Gibbons was general chairman of the arrangements for the entire evening. NOTICE Students interested in receiving copy of bulletin entitled "Opportunities for Veterans at De Paul University" may secure a copy by calling at any one of the various De Paul libraries. Alumni Sponsor Concert ...Page 1, Col. 2 University May Day.- Page 1, Coi. 5 A Sedimenta! Journey ...Page 2, Coi. 1 De Bessenyey on San Francisco Parley Page 2, Col. 3 Editorial "The Little People" Page 3, Col. 2 Spillway Page 3, Col. 4 Double Dribble Page 4, Col. 1 Bowling News Page 4, Col. 5 Page 3, Col. 1 Pie Squared Fratority Holds Important Meet On Tuesday, May 8, the Pie Are Squared Fratority held its second social of this school year in the Men's Lounge of the Uptown liberal Arts Building. The officers of the fratority were very much gratified at the turn out, in spite of the fact that it was V-E Day. Refreshments, in the form of beer, potato chips, and soft drinks, were served. Next Tuesday, May 15, at 7:30 p.m., in Room 105 of the Science Building, the fratority will hold a very important meeting. It is imperative that all members be present at this meeting, because the rules and aims of the organization will be formally drawn up. Following this, the talk by Rosemary Allen, originally scheduled for May 18, will be given. On Tuesday, May 22, the fratority will hold its last social of the year. It will be a HardTimes party. Watch for further details in next weeks edition of the De Paulia. University May Day Will Honor Blessed Virgin On Friday, May 25, De Paul University will celebrate May Day in honor of the Blessed Virgin. The entire school will be invited to attend and provisions will be made to alter class hours in order to permit certain free periods which will enable all the students in the school to attend. The ceremonies will include the dedication of the school to the Blessed Virgin Mary and appropriate prayers will accompany the ritual. A special meeting of the University Sodality will be held Monday, May 14, in Room 201 at 11:50 a.m. All members are urged to attend. Those students who are interested in assisting at mass with the De Paul Sodality, are cordially invited to attend mass every Friday in the Priests' Chapel. SAC MEETS TO ELECT OFFICERS TUESDAY NIGHT The Student Activities Council will hold its next meeting Tuesday evening, May 15, at 8 p.m. The meeting will take place as usual in the 17th floor lounge in the Downtown Building.The assembly will be presided over by Lucia Plonka, president of the Student Activities Council.The main business of this meeting will be the election of officers for the coming year, 1945-46. Nominations will be opened from the floor. The offices which must be filled are: president, vice president, and secretary-treasurer. All representatives who constitute the voting quorum are requested by Rev. Thomas W. Connolly, C.M., moderator of the group, to please be on time because the meeting will begin punctually at 8 p.m.